Histories of Women Working in Engineering and Construction in the UK

This blogpost will be a bit of a break from my usual fare of biographical notes about interesting women engineers of the past. Today I want to consider women whose names have become attached to things or concepts: Eponymous Women. A few months ago I wrote in to “Feedback” – the page of humorous oddities…

Usually, in this blog, I am writing about women of the more distant past, but today I want to introduce you to Margaret Law who died last month. I am embarrassed to say that I hadn’t previously heard of her until the obituary notes popped up on the internet. Born in about 1928, Margaret gained…

Dorothée Pullinger, nowadays celebrated for her pioneering work as an engineer, car producer and entrepreneur, has generally been more associated with the Dumfries area of Scotland where she worked after the First World War before moving to London and then Guernsey. However, to understand how she came to be so successful in those later moves…

Anyone who is a ‘proper’ Oral Historian will no doubt read this and chortle at my naivety. Previous readers of this blog will know that I am trying to record the stories of women in engineering history. Of course history is now too, not just the dead and buried, so I am working with others…

The title for this post is a quote from the first sentence of a blog from Serious Engineering, which lead me to think that perhaps lots of people think it is a ‘new’ thing and a ‘problem’ that needs to be cured by changing the girls and women. Whilst not unique to the UK, this…

In the strange way that seems to happen quite often when you are rootling around in the dusty papers of archives, I have recently stumbled upon another very unusual woman* who was a pioneer in her work and her life. I found a mention of Joy Ferguson in a slim folder of press cuttings in…

The early history of women becoming professional engineers in the UK, at the end of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is full of the barriers and gatekeepers which had to be passed before women could get in. Obviously, getting the education was one barrier but another was that the professionalisation of engineering brought about…

I have recently been honoured to be asked by the publishers of the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography to write proposals for two women in the early history of women working as engineers in the UK: Margaret Rowbotham and Cleone de Hevingham Griff. From my general gathering of information (I have some 400 women engineers…

The following collection of about 200 books have been donated by myself and my friend Dr Rosa Michaelson to the Lovelace-Drummond section on women in STEM at the Glasgow Women’s Library. We also donated a lot of ‘grey materials’ – reports and so on which are often not allocated ISBNs and often don’t get archived…

In my (very slow) work indexing the names of all the women mentioned in the Women’s Engineering Society’s journal, The Woman Engineer since 1919, I have just found the first mention of Daphne Jackson, in Volume 10, issue 2 of 1966. She is listed as just having joined the society in the Member grade: “Miss…

“Assume equality. Don’t be apologetic. Men are quick to sense it and to take advantage. Don’t try to be both a business-woman and a housewife. Hire somebody to mend your stockings. Men in executive positions have learned to travel comfortably. Learn to do the same. Don’t waste your energy on small things.” [from a biography…

Originally posted on IET Archives Blog: Given the interest generated by the recent high profile news story, when it was suggested that some of the nations’ favourite recipes would no longer be available via the BBC website, we thought that we would delve into the archives of the EAW to find some recipes for those…

Text Widget

This is a text widget. The Text Widget allows you to add text or HTML to your sidebar. You can use a text widget to display text, links, images, HTML, or a combination of these. Edit them in the Widget section of the Customizer.